Word: sums
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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This drive, which will last one week, will aim to collect $4000 for the class fund, a sum which is is hoped will meet all expenses incurred by the class during its four years in college. In order to raise this amount it will be necessary for every member of the class to contribute $5.00, but as this is an impossibility for some men, those who can give more will be asked...
...University Committee of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation has received $130 as a result of its first two weeks' contributions. The committee has done no canvassing so that this sum represents a free-will offering. Contributions will still be accepted and may be given to members of the Committee or mailed to F. S. Pollsk '23, Dana...
...petition to recognize boxing as an intercollegiate sport in the University was voted down, as was the proposal to appropriate money for a trip of the tennis team to England this summer. It was decided to set aside the sum of money necessary to add six squash courts to Randolph Gymnasium. A lacrosse game with Oxford on April 25 was approved, and the appointments of Harold Brooks Walker '23 of Detroit, Mich, and of Edward George Lowry Jr. of Washington, D. C. as University and Freshman wrestling captains respectively, were ratified...
...bill. There are other factors which point out the beneficial results a national Department of Education could give Experiences during the war show that Americanization is a slow process; the Towner-Sterling Bill would help that situation by appropriating $7,500,000 for such work. A similar sum to be used for the training of native-born illiterates, and 50 millions for the equalization of opportunities in public, elementary, and secondary schools, would surely do good. This, and the industrial regeneration hoped for as the result of the Muscle Shoals scheme, are probably the two things which just...
...carry up building materials, had been long since forgotten, in fact a new form of the sport had to be invented to roll the rocks down again. The spectators increased prodigiously in numbers. Railings were built along the cliff-tops, and places allotted on payment of a substantial sum. Tickets were soon at a premium; these, let me add, were the small bone chips which we have gathered in large numbers from the ruins. In time, the income from this source alone was sufficient to maintain the whole institution...